Hardware manual

70 Appendix B Setup Example
4 Click the Add button to define the range of addresses to dynamically assign. The range
should be large enough to accommodate current and future client computers. But
make sure you exclude some addresses (at the start or end of the range) so they’re
reserved for devices that need static IP addresses or for VPN users.
Here are some sample values:
Starting IP Address: 192.168.0.2
Ending IP Address: 192.168.0.102
Subnet Mask: 255.255.0.0
Network Interface: En1
Router: 192.168.0.1
5 Make sure the DNS pane contains the following values:
Default Domain: example.com
Name Servers: 192.168.0.1
6 Click LDAP to configure DHCP to identify the server you’re configuring as the source of
directory information for clients who are served dynamic IP addresses.
The server you’re setting up should be identified in the Server Name field, because you
set up the server as an Open Directory master when you used Server Assistant. Other
settings are optional for this example.
7 Click WINS to configure DHCP to serve Windows-specific settings to clients who are
served dynamic IP addresses.
Supply these values:
WINS/NBNS Primary Server: 192.168.0.1
NBT Node Type: Broadcast (b-node)
8 Click Save, click the back arrow, enable the internal Ethernet interface, then click Start
Service.
Step 7: Set up NAT service
1 In Server Admin, select NAT in the Computers & Services list.
2 Click Settings.
3 Select the external interface from the “External network interface” pop-up menu.
4 Click Save, then click Start Service.